I am 21 rn as of this posting I love rockhounding as well as getting fat as fuck lol. I enjoy the outdoors and reading as well as watching and binging the Clone Wars and true crime docuseries. Hmu FAs FFAs, feedees and all of the above. No minors plz
Feedist DINNER PARTIES sounds fun! All Feeders take turns feeding the Feedees... Until one by one you pigs tap out. The last pig eating (because obviously no one will be standing 🤭), will have earned the reward of being Praised/Humiliatied and or USED, in any way we feeders see fit. 😏
Now who's coming to dinner?
i dont know or remember what this is except that it's a commission! i don't usually allow sweat in my comms at all but i remember i was in dire straits for a bit!! so that explains that
Hansel and the feeder witch 😍 @currytums
Inspiration
All of my fantasies in one post
*Sings* 🎶 By Deeside Deli
Sweet dreams are made of Cheese
Who am I to dis a Brie
I Cheedar the world and a Feta Cheese
Everybody's looking for Stilton. 🎶
Cheesecake is literally the best, most delicious, most delectable, and seriously fattening dessert there is!
Which greedy pig thinks they can eat a whole pie? Or isnt afraid to fall into a food coma trying 😄😇😏
Lecture
TW: References to medical fatphobia and health conditions.
Your eyes dart nervously back and forth, from one side of the lecture hall to another. Surely they’re not going to see you like this and just sit there? Surely someone is going to step in and help?
But your hopes are disappointed. You’re met, to the extent the audience looks you in the eyes at all, with blank or half-bored stares. The uncaring look of people who see you and the half-ton of lard filling your body as a technical exercise, and little more. The lecture drones on next to you, and after a few minutes, you’re finally able to focus on what’s being said.
“…recall that yesterday’s subject exhibited signs of severe morbid obesity with excessive deposits of adipose tissue almost exclusively at the anterior abdomen. Today’s subject, by contrast—” at this, you feel the lecturer’s gloved hand grasp one of your bulging love handles, squeeze a solid handful, and lift as he continues “—supplements this distribution with deposits throughout the inguinal, gluteal, and posterior thigh regions, and to a lesser extent, in the pectoral and inframammary regions.” You feel one of your tits being lifted as the lecturer holds it in the palm of their hand, pointing out further details with the other. “So as you see, adipose distribution can vary significantly, based on a number of factors…”
The audience continues listening and taking notes. Occasionally, you see two of its white-coated members whisper to each other, gesturing at some point or other on your expansive body. Your mind wanders from the lecture again, and you begin to look around the room, to the extent the restraints on your bariatric exam chair allow. Despite the audience’s lack of direct attention to you, you’re keenly aware of how exposed and on display you are.
The angle of the chair allows your wide, doughy belly to spill down your lap and between your knees. It spreads your lumpy, shapeless legs into a split that leaves the bulging sacs of fat on your thighs and calves in full view. Likewise, because of the backward tilt of the seat, your head is also tilted back, bringing your chin level with your triple chins and emphasizing them along with your wobbly cheeks and jowls. Restraints tie your arms against padded extensions on either side of the main chair, holding them in a T-pose that causes the flab on your forearms to hang down in puckered globs and the bulk on your upper arms to pool around your shoulders, further squeezing the fat around your face. It’s a position in which, if there were any doubt, you’re shown off as the thoroughly, completely, and probably irrevocably fattened blob you are.
Eventually, the display screens on either side of the hall catch your eye — specifically, the unfamiliar shape appearing next to some inscrutable pixelated numbers in black and white. Then, suddenly, something in the lecture strikes you and the image clicks into stark comprehension.
“…86% body fat, with the result that additional strain on the musculoskeletal structure produces the characteristic bend in the vertebral column to compensate…”
The ill-defined shape on the screen, viewed through the lens of an MRI machine, is a person — is you. You knew you were huge, of course, but your breath catches in your throat to see your gluttony presented in this way — the cross-section showing the muscles and organs and skeleton of a normal person, but floating, buried, smothered in a sea of white-yellow tissue, spreading out shapeless in all directions. Hundreds of pounds of fat, dominating your body, captured with the indisputable precision of medical imaging. You are an anomaly. A curiosity. A pathology. A disease, needing to be treated.
You barely have time to process all of this before you feel two attendants beginning to undo the restraints holding back your arms and legs. You feel your feet spring forward slightly, no longer held down and now pushed out by the bulk of the fat hanging off your calves and thighs. Your arms fall immediately to your sides — or, at least, as close to your sides as the tremendous piles of rolls fighting your bingo wings and forearm flab for space will allow. You slide down from the tilted half-chair/half-gurney to a standing position, and feel a hot ache radiate through you, your body crying out at your full weight being put on your frame for the first time in a long time.
“We’ll see if we can get a demonstration of mobility. Clearly, physical activity isn’t this subject’s strong suit.” A stifled but derisive laugh ripples through the audience at this first flush of color commentary from the lecturer. You turn to look at the lecturer, standing at the lectern, and they gesture to the far side of the hall. A set of double doors, wide enough for you to go through, with a bright “Exit” sign above them, stand about thirty yards away.
Is this it? Are you free to go? After being fattened and poked and prodded for so long, are they finally going to let you just walk out?
You have to try. Slowly, deliberately, and with a shock of pain at every step, you lift your blubber-laden legs one at a time, putting your bare foot down with a wet-sounding plop, as you work your way closer to the door. You look around from the door to the audience to the attendants, eyes widened almost to the point of panic. You see all the audience now paying close attention to you, many of them looking back with genuine surprise, apparently somewhat impressed to see a person as fat as a small cow able to walk at all. But seeing nobody move to stop you as you continue your degrading waddle forward, you try to pick up the pace. Your flabby arms swing in a wide circle, trying to counterbalance the movement of the vast bulk hanging off your midsection, the belly and tits and side rolls wobbling chaotically with each step forward.
“As you can see, mobility is diminished as a result not just of the added weight, but also the severe limitations on range of motion caused by the excess adipose tissue.”
Barely halfway toward the door, you can hear the sound of your heart beating over the drone of the lecture, pounding as if it’s about to burst out of your chest. Sweat dims your eyes, and the heat radiating from your body — but, it feels like, especially from your florid face — makes you realize how fatigued you already are from walking just this limited distance. Walking this distance — but with an extra eight hundred pounds or so more than you’re used to, you think to yourself.
“Note, too, the compounding effect of the excessive weight and the lack of resiliency in the subject’s cardiovascular and respiratory systems due to a prolonged deficit in physical activity. Blood pressure and body temperature rise precipitously, stamina diminishes, breathing becomes labored, blood oxygen plummets. Hence, the elevated risk of cerebrovascular accident, embolism, myocardial infarction…”
You barely have the energy to feel angry at the lecturer’s patronizing indifference by the time you reach the door. Breathing ragged, soaked with sweat, barely able to concentrate and on the verge of collapse, you stumble into a lean against the door frame, desperate to catch your breath so you can finish your escape. It’s right there — you can reach out and touch the push bar, hear what sounds like street noise outside — but your body won’t let you. Your clouded mind won’t focus, your bloated legs won’t lift, your wobbling arms hang limp by your heaving, flabby chest. Exhaustion and despair rise within you in equal measure as you hear the gurney chair being rolled across the room, feel your body being jiggled and manhandled back into a sitting position, and see the exit doors and all hope of help receding as you’re rolled back to center stage, defeated.
Numb and indifferent now, you offer no resistance, sensing the tube and mask being fitted into your mouth as if watching it happening to someone else from a distance. You utter little more than an involuntary groan of complaint or protest — it doesn’t concern you, any more than does the flow of something cold you can feel pooling in your stomach.
“…typical example has a maximum capacity of barely two to four liters. However, consistent overfeeding with a diet that includes a sufficient volume of fiber at appropriate intervals has demonstrated the ability to reliably expand stomach volume to a maximum capacity of 14-16 liters, with p of .05 in our internal studies…”
The sound of the lecture flows past you, mixing with the buzz of the pump filling you with more and more of the chilly slop, and the low creak of the gurney as it takes the added weight. Your eyelids droop, drowsy with the food and your exertions; and you drift away to sleep, the gaze of the audience trained on the slow, relentless expansion of your tumescent belly the last thing you see before your tired eyes close shut.
Credit to the incomparable Mairari/@hyenaddict for the original post that inspired this story
working on comms and such, I'm more active on dA at the moment
Here’s the full weight gain sequence
Reblog if you enjoyed it 🥰
P.s.: this would be soooo hot if this was actually possible 🥵
hello just wanted to say your belly looks very cute and kissable ok bye 🙈
Your adorable thank you so much
as someone who struggles with understanding the social norms and aspect of things, what stuff would qualify to you as like making a move? (sorry if that made no sense)
Most believe using a scalpel is the best way to surgically maneuver the confines of social interaction and attraction. I don’t screw with any of that. I believe in the bluntness of the hammer and I do not do that myself because I’ve done it before and it has not ended well so if somebody’s going to flirt with me I prefer bluntness because I know how I feel and I know how I flirt and if I buy pulled out what I don’t trust is my viewing of other peoples emotions.
unrelated to feedism but would you consider yourself someone who makes the first move or someone who waits for the other person to make a move?
It’s both ways. Usually I wait because I’ve had some bad experiences. Once another makes the first move I’m usually all in.
I want you to be stuck under the weight of my decisions. Your only purpose is to chew and swallow. To ask for more. To graze even while I'm not watching. To buy bigger clothes with room to grow. To run out of stamina halfway through rolling over. That's when it gets scary, and yet thats what we crave. To gasp for air, and yet savour the flavours in the ever available milkshakes. To struggle to sit up, and yet continue to munch on the latest bag of processed carbs and fat. To need to switch arms every few bites as the arms and wrists are heavy with years of added rolls. To finally give up with tired arms hurting too much to go on, and breath shaky from the exertion. To find your lips sucking on the endless supply of shake despite feeling the building pressure in the belly turning into pain. To daydream about the results of being such an obedient and gluttonous piggy. And knowing how proud I am of your gluttonous growing belly.
I'm so proud of you, sweetheart.
You just look so marvelous with the extra weight, I can't wait to see how much more good-looking you'll become as time goes by.
I know you've been trying very hard to accomplish your goals and every morcel of food that passes your lips is a little victory. You're doing such a great job at gaining weight for you and for me.
You are so so beautiful and loved, baby.
I only wish you could see yourself as I see you, so cute, so chubby and lovely. I want to kiss you each time I see you, hug you so tight to share the butterflies in my stomach and feel how soft you are.
The indent of your belly button in your t-shirt is only my latest obsession, without mentioning your soft arms, face and hands.
You are so beautiful, so perfect.
And I am so proud of you.







